The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17 |
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Seite ix
... though both were naturally in the rough unfinished MS .; the poet had evidently not made up his mind which of the two epitaphs to ... or that which , “ commonly rehearsed , ” was not his , “ but was made by the poet Callimachus .
... though both were naturally in the rough unfinished MS .; the poet had evidently not made up his mind which of the two epitaphs to ... or that which , “ commonly rehearsed , ” was not his , “ but was made by the poet Callimachus .
Seite xiv
C . parts , again , exhibit the sustained grandeur of the Poet's noblest and most varied music . And in these parts the true Shakespearean cast of thought and imagery comes upon us in all its richness , gushing , apparently , from the ...
C . parts , again , exhibit the sustained grandeur of the Poet's noblest and most varied music . And in these parts the true Shakespearean cast of thought and imagery comes upon us in all its richness , gushing , apparently , from the ...
Seite xv
... who are observant and thoughtful enough to be capable of it , had planted in him so strong a sympathy with the state of feeling predominant in Timon , as to turn the scale against his better judgment as a dramatic poet and artist .
... who are observant and thoughtful enough to be capable of it , had planted in him so strong a sympathy with the state of feeling predominant in Timon , as to turn the scale against his better judgment as a dramatic poet and artist .
Seite xvi
H sort like an unfinished work of the same hand which finished the other parts , but show a totally different cast of thought , of diction , and imagery , from what we find in any other of the Poet's plays , or in those parts of this ...
H sort like an unfinished work of the same hand which finished the other parts , but show a totally different cast of thought , of diction , and imagery , from what we find in any other of the Poet's plays , or in those parts of this ...
Seite xvii
... had informed the whole with a larger measure of that surpassing energy and grace of thought and diction which mark the part of Timon himself , showing that the powers and resources of the Poet were then in their most palmy state .
... had informed the whole with a larger measure of that surpassing energy and grace of thought and diction which mark the part of Timon himself , showing that the powers and resources of the Poet were then in their most palmy state .
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